Charles Chesnutt (1858-1932) Edited by Nina Lee Braden.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
To Kill a Mockingbird Notes
Advertisements

To Kill a Mockingbird Notes Author: Harper Lee Setting: Story begins in the year 1933 in Maycomb County, Alabama. The U.S. was in the midst of the Great.
Author: Gail Godwin By: Adrean Rogers & Iqra Khan
A Raisin in the Sun By Lorraine Hansberry Important Facts and How to Read a Play.
Désirée’s Baby Kate Chopin. The author A forerunner of feminist authors. Two short story collections: Bayou Folk (1894) and A Night in Acadie (1897).
This week: Regionalism Rags-to-Riches. Regionalism Local color writing Regions outside New York City  New England  South  Midwest  West.
“The Wife of His Youth” Charles W. Chestnutt
Realism Notes Discontent of Women. Literature of the Civil War and Beyond As the United States grew rapidly after the Civil War, the increasing.
The Progressive Movement
Window Cleaning, 1935 “I refuse to compromise and see blacks as anything less than a proud and majestic people.” Aaron Douglas
Beloved: The Novel By : Toni Morrison Presentation By: Sheena Monds Edited by: Dr. Picart and Donna Gallagher.
 A folktale is a story that was told by generations of storytellers before it was ever written down.  We don’t know the names of all of the storytellers:
Literature of the Reconstruction By the climax of this era, Frederick Douglass had died and Booker T. Washington and W.E.B DuBois became the.
Context for Their Eyes Were Watching God
Joseph Bruchac By: Amanda Burleson. The Early Years Joseph Bruchac was born October 16, 1942 in Saratoga Springs, New York. Joseph’s father was of Slovak.
 The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was written by Mark Twain. It first published in the United States in  It was published during the Gilded.
Hansberry, A Raisin in the Sun, Drama, and Struggle Mr. Moccia ’ s Honors/Pre-IB.
Mondea Christiana, Novăcean Raluca- XII B. She believed in the presence of supernatural powers (such as ghosts or spirits) and began to express her feelings.
 1. need : knead :: cite : a. quote b. mention c. sight d. manifest  2. alike: identical :: tranquil: a. timid b. devious c. peaceful d. hardy.
Hansberry, A Raisin in the Sun, Drama, and Struggle.
A Raisin in the Sun Lorraine Hansberry. About the author... Deeply committed to the black struggle for equality and human rights, Lorraine Hansberry's.
1918 to mid-1930s  After the emancipation of African American slaves, racism and prejudice was still heavily apparent in the South.  World War I created.
African American Leaders
AFRICAN-AMERICAN POETS. Paul Laurence Dunbar  Born 1872 in Dayton, Ohio  First African-American poet to gain national recognition.
African Folklore in America Surviving pieces of African culture are very important as a source of pride, cultural identity and resistance to oppression.
Richard Wright Biography Born on a plantation near Natchez, Mississippi, on September 4, Son of a sharecropper who deserted his family.
Famous Authors:  A literary movement that treated black themes, African American history, and folklore.  Its center was Harlem, an area of.
Their Eyes Were Watching God Zora Neale Hurston and the Harlem Renaissance.
Charles W. Chesnutt.  Charles W. Chesnutt, America's first great Black novelist, lived in the distinct political, social and cultural environment that.
Nelle Harper Lee was born in Monroeville, Alabama, in Like Jem and Scout, her father was a lawyer. She studied at the University of Alabama and.
A ROSE FOR EMILY. MEMBERS Cintia Tapia Mariana Arias Laura Sanchez Brenda Guardatti María Noelia Videla Romina Pallotti Durán.
Defining the Epic “In unsettled times like these, when world cultures, countries and religions are facing off in violent confrontations, we could benefit.
Hansberry, A Raisin in the Sun, Drama, and Struggle Mr. Moccia ’ s Academic English I.
Regionalism
Southern Gothic Literature Background Information on writing style and on Flannery O’Connor.
William Faulkner Human Conflict Dr. Peih-ying Lu Oct 22, 2012.
BRER RABBIT TALES Southern, African-American Folklore
Tales of Uncle Remus. Joel Chandler Harris Born 1845/8 to unwed mother in Georgia Poor, stutterer, shy and self-conscious Scant education, printers devil.
1891?–60, African-American writer By Jon. African-American writer, b. Notasulga, Ala. She grew up in the pleasant all- black town of Eatonville, Fla.
Traditional Literature Folktales, Fables, Fairytales, Myths.
Regionalism The Realism of the South. How it started  Grass Roots movement: started from the people not in power and moved up  Quality based on number.
“A Rose for Emily” By William Faulkner.
William Faulkner ( ). Background The South: A large territory in southeast America; sharing similar geographical features, accent, race, climate;
CHARLES CHESNUTT Eric Arnesen & Lamaris Reed. Biography  Born in Cleveland, Ohio. June 20 th, 1858  Son of two freed African- Americans  Moved to Fayetteville,
Mark Twain: An Author Study. Born Samuel Clemens on November 30, 1835 Recognized by his pen name, Mark Twain Who was he?
AFRICAN LITERATURE: Courage in Rising above all challenges
The Awakening Kate Chopin. Kate Chopin - biographical 1850: born Kate O’Flatery in St. Louis 1850: born Kate O’Flatery in St. Louis – Raise by her mother,
A Rose for Emily By William Faulkner. William Faulkner William Faulkner – one of the 20th Century’s greatest writers – The Sound and the Fury – As I Lay.
Charles Chesnutt The House Behind the Cedars. Biography Born in Cleveland in 1858 to “free persons of color” parents After the Civil War, Chesnutt’s family.
 During slavery, blacks were not given any sort of legal identity, and thus under the law did not qualify as human beings. This enabled white slave-owners.
Women’s Rights The legacy of women’s struggle to earn equality in a world turned against them. By Kennedy Dorman.
The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man Presented by Reed Wolonsky
Her novel “Beloved” TONI MORRISON. Toni Morrison is a Nobel Prize- and Pulitzer Prize-winning American novelist. Among her best known novels are The Bluest.
By: Briana Vegors. SEPTEMBER 4, 1908-NOVEMBER 28, 1960.
Charles Chesnutt By: Trishie Schweinfurth. Charles Chesnutt.
AFRICAN AMERICAN WRITERS
Lorainne Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun
Hansberry, A Raisin in the Sun, Drama, and Struggle
Kate Chopin’s “Emancipation” and “Awakening”
American Literature Realism and Naturalism ( )
Realism & Naturalism ( )
To Kill A Mockingbird Harper Lee.
“The Wife of His Youth” Charles W. Chestnutt
A Rose for Emily By William Faulkner.
The Harlem Renaissance
Native American Literature
American Literature Realism and Naturalism ( )
Themes in Harriet Jacob's Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
American Literature Realism and Naturalism ( )
A Troubled Nation American Literature
Presentation transcript:

Charles Chesnutt ( ) Edited by Nina Lee Braden

Early Life Born in Cleveland, Ohio Mixed race ancestry Raised in Fayetteville, North Carolina. Family ran a grocery store after the Civil War

Early Adulthood Was teacher and later assistant principal of normal (teacher’s) school in Fayetteville After marriage, moved with his family to Cleveland to find more favorable opportunities in the North. Passed the Ohio state bar and launched a successful business career by setting up a court reporting firm followed by a stenography company.

Life and Career Contrary to the majority of his Black contemporaries whose works appeared in the Black press, “Chesnutt skillfully enlisted the white-controlled publishing industry in the service of his social message.”

His Audience: Black and White “More successfully than any of his predecessors in African American fiction, Chesnutt gained a hearing from a significant portion of the national reading audience that was both engaged and disturbed by his analyses and indictments of racism” (Concise Oxford 70).

Just a Local Color Writer? Charles Chesnutt falls into the Local Color movement but goes beyond it. –Often condemnatory of racism Social criticism –The American “Color Line” as the iron rule of existence –Early signs of Black Naturalism

Literary Output First important narrative, “The Goophered Grapevine” (1887) was published in The Atlantic Monthly –introduced a new type of story-teller, the crafty ex-slave, spinning a yarn in Black dialect about the Black lore of conjuring and voodoo, Black local color

Short Stories William Dean Howells admired Chesnutt’s work and published many of his short stories. Collections of his short stories –The Conjure Woman (1899) –The Wife of his Youth and Other Stories of the Color Line (1899)

Novels The House Behind the Cedars (1900) confronting the problem of passing; The Marrow of Tradition (1901) about the national racial hysteria that culminated in the Wilmington Riots of 1898; The Colonel’s Dream (1905) about the failed attempt to revive a Southern town devastated by racism and exploitation.

Major Themes Black folklore, voodoo The crafty black folk hero Middle-class blacks contained by American racism “Passing,” the problem of “miscegenation,” racial identity

Chesnutt’s Significance The most influential African American writer at the turn of the century “A pioneer Negro author, the first to exploit in fiction the complex lives of men and women of mixed blood” (Helen Chesnutt).

Later Life A passion for writing, but literary career relatively short. Returned to business in the early 1900s. Though never entirely giving up literature, he refocused his attention on racial issues in other forms, serving his community –lecturer –political activist –powerful role model.

The Plantation Tale White speaker’s prologue written in standard, sometimes elevated English. Shift to an old Black uncle, reminded on any given occasion of a particular tale he knows. Folktale told in heavy dialect of Black slaves in the pre-Civil War South. Center on the conjuring practices of Black slaves or tales of shrewd talking animals. Nostalgic for idealized peaceful, orderly days of slavery.

Why would Charles Chesnutt take up the form of the plantation tale? –Desire for commercial and critical success –Desire to appropriate and parody the form

Example: “The Goophered Grapevine” What is the structure of the narrative? How is Uncle Julius both similar to and different from Uncle Remus? Who is the trickster figure in Chesnutt’s stories?

Gothicization of the Plantation Tale Setting: things are in disrepair Plot: conjuring powers of black characters Theme: confrontation between rational and supernatural forces –How are supernatural powers used? –Which force prevails in the story? –How is slavery ultimately depicted?

Charles Waddell Chesnutt Charles Chesnutt, left, with brother Lewis; daughter Helen Chesnutt